It is equivalent to the french subjunctive. You use it after ut and ne or to express an obligation
It is equivalent to the french subjunctive. You use it after ut and ne or to express an obligation
Habeas is the second-person singular present active subjunctive of the verb habere, "to have". There are several ways to translate the subjunctive into English terms, the closest in this instance being as a wish or polite command: "May you have"; "you should have".
Fer/ferte auxilium nobis!
"As it were" (short for as IF it were ) is a past subjunctive, used to mean "so to speak."
Ubican mean "when" or "where", and is used in questions/relative clausesCumat the beginning of a clause with an indicative verb means whenCumat the beginning of a clause with a subjunctive verb can mean whenUtat the beginning of a clause with an indicative verb can mean whenQuo Temporemeans "at what time", and can be used in questions.
It is the second-person singular pluperfect active subjunctive of creō.Creō is the Latin verb meaning:I create, make, produce.I beget, give birth to.I prepare, cause.I choose.
The verb fieri in Latin is used as the passive of facere, which means "to do" or "to make". Fiat is the third-person present subjunctive of fieri and means "let it be made" or "let it be done". It is the word used in the Latin Bible to translate God's creative word "Let there be" in the creation story of Genesis 1.
Yes, the conjunction autant que can mean "as much as" ("as far as") and may be followed by the subjunctive. The choice of the dependent verb as in the indicative or subjunctive depends upon the verb in question (savoir ["to know"] historically will be always in the subjunctive) and the type of certainty/uncertainty regarding the accuracy, predictability or reliability of the answer.
The English definition of the Latin word celent refers to a third person plural present active subjunctive of celo. You can translate more Latin words to English at the Globse website using the Latin-English dictionary.
that I might have (subjunctive of the verb avoir - to have)
Tenearis. The main verb in this sentence, vivas("may you live"), is present subjunctive. In the Latin sequence of tenses, if the main verb is in the present tense, the verb in the subordinate clause ispresent subjunctive when it expresses contemporary or subsequent actionperfect subjunctive when it expresses prior actionSince the person addressed will be held in remembrance after he or she has lived, the present subjunctive is called for.The complete sentence is Vivas ut a multis memoria tenearis: "May you live so that you are held in remembrance by many."To break this down:vivas - present active subjunctive "may you live"ut - conjunction "so that"a multis - prepositional phrase "by many"memoria - ablative noun "in remembrance"tenearis - present passive subjunctive "you are/may be held"
The word embarrare does not exist in Latin.In Spanish, it is the first- and third-person singular future subjunctive of the verb embarrar, "to cover with mud". And it is conjugated: embarrare, embarrares, embarrare, embarráremos, embarrareis, embarraren. Actually this tense (future subjunctive) in Spanish has become old-fashioned in spoken Spanish. It is only used in Classic Spanish texts or in certain expressions such as "sea lo que fuere" "Adonde fuereshas lo que vieres (Do what Romans do)". This tense has been replaced by the present subjunctive: embarrara, embarraras... or the past perfect subjunctive: haya embarrado, hayas embarrado...